Yankees' Luis Gil impressive in first rehab start, strikes out six in 3.1 innings for Double-A

Yankees starter Luis Gil made his first rehab start on Sunday with Double-A Somerset and had an impressive outing.

The right-hander went 3.1 innings and allowed a run on two hits and a walk while striking out six. He threw 50 pitches (36 strikes) which was his pitch-count.

It was the first time Gil was back on the mound after suffering a right lat strain in spring training which landed him on the 60-day IL to begin the season.

Before New York's rubber game against the Chicago Cubs on Sunday, manager Aaron Boone told reporters that the organization definitely wants Gil to have at least a few rehab starts before he returns to the majors, although a final number of pitches thrown for his next start is not yet set.

"It'll probably be a more conservative build," Boone said about Gil.

Giants' quiet offensive day vs. Dodgers perfectly sums up first-half struggles

Giants' quiet offensive day vs. Dodgers perfectly sums up first-half struggles originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Bob Melvin is generally quick to answer questions, but when he was asked Sunday afternoon to sum up the first half, he paused for four seconds and took a deep breath.

“We’d like to have a few more wins,” Melvin said. “But we put ourselves in a position to have a good second half and get to the postseason.”

If the 2025 MLB postseason started Monday, the Giants would be watching from home. They went 52-45 in the first half, which is better than most expected, but still has them third in the NL West, a half-game behind the San Diego Padres and six behind the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Giants are currently half a game out of the final NL Wild Card spot

Of those 52 wins, there have been some stunners. On this homestand, Patrick Bailey hit a walk-off inside-the-park homer, the ninth walk-off at Oracle Park this season. When Luis Matos shocked the Dodgers with a two-run blast in the ninth Sunday, the Giants were poised for a 10th. 

But the Matos blast was San Francisco’s only notable offensive moment in a 5-2 loss on Sunday that fit in with much of the first half, and especially June and July. The Giants rank 24th in the league in OPS and 21st in runs. Even with Rafael Devers in the fold, this is a lineup that was a disappointment in the first half and didn’t adequately back one of the best pitching staffs in baseball. 

On Sunday, All-Star Robbie Ray allowed two runs over six innings to give the Giants a chance for a series win, but they managed just three hits through eight. After Matos took Tanner Scott deep, they failed to score the automatic runner from second in the 10th and 11th innings. 

There was some bad luck involved — James Outman chased down Devers’ liner to the track in the 10th — but the day was also filled with unproductive at-bats against Yoshinobu Yamamoto and a mediocre Dodgers bullpen. Before the Devers at-bat, Patrick Bailey failed to get a bunt down and then flew out softly to center. Afterward, Willy Adames grounded out to third. 

Adames has been the team’s most dangerous hitter over the past month, but he finished the first half with a .680 OPS. The only Giant who heads into the break with an OPS above .800 is Devers, who did most of that lifting in Boston. He was at .905 before the trade but is at .656 in orange and black.

Matt Chapman had a solid first half and is on pace for a four-win season. Heliot Ramos has slumped in recent weeks, but he should generally be happy, too. His 117 wRC+ puts him right behind Chapman as the only Giants hitters who have been comfortably above league-average. 

Mike Yastrzemski (.723 OPS), Jung Hoo Lee (.720) and Wilmer Flores (.696) all had their moments in the first half, but the overall numbers don’t stand out. Bailey’s flyout in extras gave him a .203 average at the break. Opening Day second baseman Tyler Fitzgerald played his way back to Triple-A, and Matos did so poorly against lefties before Sunday’s blast that a planned platoon of him and Yastrzemski was scrapped. 

Melvin looks at all of those names and sees a solid everyday lineup on paper. He mostly stuck with the same group against the Dodgers, but the Giants managed just eight hits over the final two games of the series. Melvin said afterward that he still has plenty of faith. 

“We’re going to be better offensively. I believe that,” he said. “We have some guys that are coming around a little bit, we have some guys that will come around a little bit more. We have some guys in the middle of the lineup that are going to do more damage. I do think our offense is going to be better in the second half.”

The team’s decision-makers see a group that should benefit from the four days off. Devers has been playing through groin and back tightness and Chapman had just one extra-base hit in eight games after rushing back from a hand injury. Others might simply need a couple of days on the lake to clear their heads, but it’s dangerous to just assume that the second half will bring fresh luck. The Giants were remarkably healthy throughout the first half, with Chapman being the only one of the team’s marquee hitters to miss real time. 

That was an area where the Giants benefitted from plenty of good fortune. In extra innings Sunday, there was nothing but bad luck. 

After the near-miss from Devers, the Dodgers took the lead on a pair of bloops and an infield single. There wasn’t much the Giants could complain about, though. For most of three hours at Oracle Park, they did very little to put themselves in position to win the game. It was the kind of day they have gotten used to, even while generally having a good first half. 

“You pick yourself up,” Melvin said. “And you move on.”

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Start of Sunday's Mets-Royals game delayed due to rain

Sunday's series finale between the Mets and Kansas City Royals will begin in a rain delay.

The new start time is 2:50 p.m.

It's the second game of the series to be delayed due to weather after the series opener began after a lengthy rain delay as well.

Clay Holmes is scheduled to start and Sean Manaea is set to make his season debut out of the bullpen in the final game before the All-Star break.

Bello tosses gem, Rafaela homers again as Sox win 10th straight

Bello tosses gem, Rafaela homers again as Sox win 10th straight originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox are the hottest team in baseball heading into the MLB All-Star break.

With help from right-hander Brayan Bello, the Red Sox completed a four-game sweep of the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday and extended their win streak to 10. Coming off his first career complete game, Bello gave the Fenway Faithful an encore with just one run allowed over 6.1 innings pitched in Boston’s 4-1 win.

Red Sox fans showed their appreciation for Bello’s recent dominance with a standing ovation as he walked off the mound.

“Like I’ve been saying, we’ve been playing well. And we’re going to go as far as we can if we pitch,” Cora said after the win. “And the kid (Bello), today, that was electric. He’s grown so much in the last three years.”

Bello has looked like a true frontline starter since the calendar flipped to June. Over his last seven outings, the 26-year-old boasts a 2.61 ERA with six quality starts. He enters the break with a career-best 3.14 ERA on the season.

The Red Sox also got a boost Sunday from the scorching Ceddanne Rafaela. The electrifying outfielder, whose walk-off homer secured Boston’s eighth straight win, hit a clutch two-run shot in the sixth inning.

Suddenly, the Red Sox are only 3.5 games back in the American League East standings and in possession of the second wild-card spot. At 53-45, they will enter the All-Star break with as many wins as the New York Yankees.

Veteran closer Aroldis Chapman, who fittingly struck out the side to close out Sunday’s victory, will be the only Red Sox player on the AL All-Star roster for Tuesday’s game. Garrett Crochet and Alex Bregman also received All-Star nods, but neither will suit up for the Midsummer Classic.

Athletics select left-handed pitcher Jamie Arnold at No. 11 in 2025 MLB Draft

Athletics select left-handed pitcher Jamie Arnold at No. 11 in 2025 MLB Draft originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics selected a pitcher in the first round for the first time since 2016 in the 2025 MLB Draft on Sunday, choosing Florida State left-hander Jamie Arnold at No. 11 overall.

After finding successful position players with 2024 first-round pick Nick Kurtz and 2023 first-rounder Jacob Wilson, the A’s certainly hope they’ve struck gold in Arnold, who completed an excellent sophomore season last spring and finished third among all Division I pitchers in strikeouts.

As a junior this season, Arnold is 8-2 with a 2.98 ERA across 15 starts with 119 strikeouts to 27 walks and a 1.063 WHIP.

Arnold’s MLB.com draft profile describes the 21-year-old as having a “rangy body and a loose, whippy arm,” with a fastball that sits in the 94-95 mph range and an ability to hit 97. His breaking ball forced a 41-percent miss rate in 2024, and he has drawn comparisons to nine-time MLB All-Star Chris Sale.

The last time the A’s drafted a first-round pitcher was in 2016, when they took right-hander Daulton Jefferies at No. 37. They selected left-hander A.J. Puk at No. 6 overall the year before that.

The A’s have one pick remaining in the 2025 draft at No. 48.

Giants select Tennessee infielder Gavin Kilen with No. 13 pick in 2025 MLB Draft

Giants select Tennessee infielder Gavin Kilen with No. 13 pick in 2025 MLB Draft originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Buster Posey appears to have added an impact bat with his first draft selection as the Giants’ president of baseball operations.

San Francisco selected Tennessee infielder Gavin Kilen with the No. 13 overall pick in the 2025 MLB Draft on Sunday afternoon.

Kilen shone at the plate last season, hitting .357 with a 1.112 OPS in 53 games for the Tennessee Volunteers.

After being touted as one of the best high-school hitting prospects in the 2022 class, Kilen’s insistence on attending Louisville University led to him falling all the way till the 13th round, where he was selected by the Boston Red Sox. Kilen never signed with Boston and spent the following two seasons with the Cardinals, spending his freshman year at second base before moving to shortstop as a sophomore.

Kilen then transferred to Tennessee for his junior season, helping lead the Volunteers to an impressive 48-17 record before falling to the Arkansas Razorbacks in the Fayetteville Super Regional.

At 5-foot-11, 187 pounds, Killen is known for his exceptional contact hitting skills, boasting a 60 hit grade on the 20-80 scale, per MLB.com.

While the Giants have the left side of their infield solidifed with Matt Chapman and Willy Adames, there isn’t a standout player blocking Kilen’s path toward securing the second-base job with the big-league club somewhere down the line.

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What we learned as game-tying Luis Matos homer wasted in Giants' loss to Dodgers

What we learned as game-tying Luis Matos homer wasted in Giants' loss to Dodgers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Before Sunday’s game, Giants manager Bob Melvin reminded his hitters that there was still a game to be played before their MLB All-Star break. For eight innings, it looked like the group was ready for a vacation, but Luis Matos changed all of that in the ninth.

Matos came off the bench and stunned the Los Angeles Dodgers with a two-run homer off closer Tanner Scott, tying a game that had been a snoozer for the home crowd all afternoon, but it wasn’t enough.

The Matos jolt was the only notable offensive moment in a 5-2 loss that fit in with a lot of the first half. The Giants pitched as well as anyone, but far too often the bats were silent. They went 52-45 in the first half and will head into the break six games behind the Dodgers. 

After the Matos homer, neither team scored the automatic runner in the 10th, which put Spencer Bivens in a hell of a spot. With a runner on second in the 11th, he came in to face Shohei Ohtani and the top of the Dodger lineup. Before Bivens’ warm-up music had even finished playing, the Giants put up four fingers to intentionally walk Ohtani. 

Bivens got two quick outs, but the Dodgers went back on top on Freddie Freeman’s bloop and added a second run on an infield single. Another bloop made it a three-run lead, and possibly gave Bivens the title of having pitched the unluckiest inning of the 2025 MLB season. 

The Giants had just three hits through eight, but Matt Chapman singled with one out in the ninth and Matos jumped on a hanging slider and crushed a 424 foot homer. Matos had just six hits in 48 at-bats against left-handed pitchers this season as he strolled to the plate.

The first-half finale was a matchup of two of the game’s best starters, and both did their part. Robbie Ray had a quality start, but the Giants got absolutely nothing going against Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who gave up a grand slam to Casey Schmitt exactly a month ago at Dodger Stadium. 

Yamamoto allowed just three hits and cruised through seven innings. The only real threat came in the seventh, when Jung Hoo Lee hit a two-out double. Yamamoto got some revenge on Schmitt, freezing him with an inning-ending splitter at the top of the zone, but thanks to his bullpen, he didn’t pick up his ninth win of the year. 

The All-Star

Ray made his second All-Star team but won’t pitch because the Giants moved him up to appear in this series instead of Hayden Birdsong. That proved savvy, even if the lineup gave him absolutely no support.

Ray went six innings for the 13th time in the first half, allowing two runs and striking out six. Two of them came in the fourth, when Freeman doubled to get the Dodgers on the board and put two in scoring position with one out. Ray struck out Teoscar Hernandez and Andy Pages to strand the runners. 

Ray finished the first half ranked fourth in the NL in innings (119), just behind teammate Logan Webb, who leads the league at 125 2/3. He’s sixth in ERA and strikeouts. 

The Other All-Star

With the break coming up, Melvin was able to get aggressive with Randy Rodriguez, who will make his first All-Star appearance on Tuesday but otherwise has four days to mostly rest up after a spectacular first half. 

Rodriguez pitched the eighth with the Giants trailing by a couple of runs, and he easily kept it that way. Michael Conforto and Shohei Ohtani flew out, and Rodriguez capped the inning with a strikeout of Mookie Betts on a nasty slider. He finished the first half with a 0.86 ERA. 

Rodriguez has the lowest ERA among MLB pitchers who have thrown at least 35 innings this season. He’s the first Giants reliever to post an ERA under 1.00 through his first 40 appearances of a season. 

Ryan’s Return

The best long-term development this week might have been the reemergence of Ryan Walker. The former closer got a breather on the last road trip to work on some mechanical fixes, and they appear to have changed the trajectory of his season. Walker hit 99.4 mph in Saturday’s game, easily the hardest pitch of his career, and he touched 97 three times in a dominant inning Sunday. 

Walker struck out a pair and got a grounder to first while pitching the seventh and going back-to-back days. His four hardest pitches of the season have come this weekend.

Walker said he was surprised by the extra juice on Saturday, and the Giants were thrilled. They need another reliable late-innings option, and Walker is again looking like the guy who cut through the National League for six months last year. 

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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Yu Darvish is back, Colt Keith is figuring it out

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, where I review my favorite waiver wire adds and drops for each week of the MLB season.

The premise is pretty straightforward. I’ll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I’ll list the category where I think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. I hope it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs.

For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and I can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

MLB: Milwaukee Brewers at Detroit Tigers
Corbin Carroll’s return and José Ramírez’s slump further shake up the top 10 this week.

Waiver Wire Hitters

Josh Smith - 1B/3B/SS/OF, TEX: 38% rostered
(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, RUNS UPSIDE)

With Josh Jung in the minors, Josh Smith is now the everyday third baseman in Texas. Over his last 25 games, Smith is slashing .303/.400/.475 with three home runs, 22 runs scored, and seven RBIs. He hit leadoff for the Rangers, so his primary value to you will be in Runs, but that's a category that often gets overlooked, so Smith could be a useful target on waiver wires if you need help there or with batting average. Another multi-position eligible hitter who has stayed on the fantasy radar is Abraham Toro - 1B/2B/3B, BOS (8% rostered). The veteran has endured a bit of a cold spell since the end of June, so this is really only a deep league target because he is still playing about 75-80% of games for the Red Sox and has eligibility in so many positions. He also hits in the middle of the order when he starts, so that has some value on an offense that's as hot as Boston is right now.

Chandler Simpson - OF, TB: 35% rostered
(RETURN FROM MINORS, SPEED WINNER)

Simpson is back up because, I guess, he became a much better defender in three weeks in the minors. Since being recalled, Simpson is hitting .362 with six runs scored and seven steals in 17 games. People will tell you that fantasy managers misunderstand Simpson's actual value, and it's not really that high, but his speed is a legit issue. He's going to hit for a strong batting average and post elite stolen base totals. If Tampa Bay keeps running hot like this, he'll chip in some runs even from the bottom of the order.

Tyler O'Neill - OF, BAL: 33% rostered
(RETURN FROM IL, POWER UPSIDE)

Tyler O'neill is back. The 30-year-old has played just 30 games this season and is hitting .176/.271/.314, but we know the power upside that he has when he's healthy and in the lineup. The Orioles have hit him seventh most of the time since he's come back, which will hurt his counting stats a bit, but he could easily move up in the order if he starts hitting. His return has also not impacted the playing time of Ramon Laureano - OF, BAL (11% rostered). It seems that the Orioles will have both players in the lineup regularly at RF/DH, and Laureano has actually played far more than O'Neill. The veteran hit .312 in June with four home runs, 19 runs scored, and 16 RBI in 21 games. He has cooled a bit in June, but he's still hitting fourth or fifth in the order, and that gives him that counting stat upside that O'Neill won't have right now.

Jac Caglianone - 1B/OF, KC: 29% rostered
(PROSPECT GROWTH, POWER UPSIDE)

We've seen a bunch of prospects this year start slow and then begin to figure it out. Cam Smith and Nick Kurtz are just two of the most recent examples. Caglianone's two mammoth home runs this week could signal that he's the next one. I recorded a video on him this week explaining my thoughts, but I would add him if he's been cut in your leagues.

Colt Keith - 1B/2B, DET: 25% rostered
(FULL-TIME JOB PROSPECT GROWTH)

A couple of weeks ago, I covered Colt Keith as a potential breakout thanks to his impressive Process+ score, which ranks 6th in all of baseball since June 1st. Process+ is a Pitcher List stat that shows "The combined value of a hitter's Decision Value, Contact Ability, and Power." At that point, he was rostered in 7% of leagues, and the stats hadn't shown up yet, but his process has been rewarded. Over his last 15 games, Keith is hitting .358/.417/.585 with two home runs, 11 runs scored, and six RBI, and his roster rate has shot up. We know prospect growth isn't linear, so it's time to jump back on board with Keith.

Carlos Narvaez - C, BOS: 22% rostered
(BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE, PLAYING TIME UPSIDE)

Narvaez remains a fringe option in one-catcher formats because he plays regularly on a good offense, but he is a must-roster in two-catcher leagues. He cooled a bit in the middle of June, but over his last 15 games, he's hitting .281/.317/.439 with two home runs, eight runs scored, and eight RBI. He's been solid for Boston all year long and could be a solid option while they're running hot. If you're looking for an option in a two-catcher format, you can go with Victor Caratini - C/1B, HOU (8% rostered), who has continued to play regularly in Houston with Yordan Alvarez suffering a setback in his rehab from a hand fracture. In his last 15 games, Caratini has five home runs and 15 RBI to go along with a .246/.246/.544 slash line. I'm not sure how long the power will remain this helpful, but he's making a lot of contact, and the home park can help.

Evan Carter - OF, TEX: 18% rostered
(POST HYPE PROSPECT, HOT STRETCH)

Kennedi Landry had a good piece on Evan Carter a few weeks ago, highlighting some of the changes that have led to his strong performance since coming off the IL...again. He admitted to putting a lot of pressure on himself after his injury, and cited playing looser and feeling like he had a better mental approach at the plate. In June, Carter hit .333/.421/.530 in 21 games with three homers, eight RBI, 12 runs scored, and five steals. The batting average hasn't carried over into July, but he does have four steals and six RBI in nine games. Those stolen bases are great to see with the injuries he's had in the past, and Carter has a real five-category skillset. He's unlikely to play against many lefties, but he can be a really solid option in all fantasy leagues. If you're looking primarily for speed in the outfield, you could turn to Jake Mangum - OF, TB (8% rostered), who is playing most days and hitting third for Tampa Bay. I'll admit that I've never been a huge Mangum believer, and I'm still not, but he is hitting .312/.347/.409 over his last 25 games with 11 RBI, 11 runs scored, and three steals. That's not doing a ton to help you outside of batting average, so I think he's more of a deep-league play, but he's making a lot of contact and has 13 steals on the year, so there is a case to be made for adding him.

Tyler Freeman - SS/OF, COL: 18% rostered
(REGULAR STARTING ROLE, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

The stretch of games in Coors is done (for now), but that doesn't mean you need to get rid of Freeman. He's hitting .360/.452/.427 over his last 25 games with 11 runs scored and seven steals. The stolen base value is a bit surprising given his previous results, but he has 12 steals this season while hitting leadoff for the Rockies. Freeman had a solid enough season last year for Cleveland, and moving to Colorado should help him. Freeman makes a lot of contact, but the hard contact is limited, and his BABIP has been low in years past. Coors Field tends to boost BABIP, so Freeman could emerge as a .270 hitter with some decent speed and multi-position eligibility. Freeman is also 15th in Process+ since June 1st, so the stats are backed up by a strong approach.

Caleb Durbin - 2B/3B/SS, MIL: 15% rostered
(BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE, HOT STRETCH)

Durbin has turned it on of late, hitting .366/.436/.463 over his last 15 games with two home runs, 10 RBI, 18 runs scored, and three steals. As I mentioned with Caglianone, it takes rookies some time to adjust to the big leagues, and we're now seeing Durbin start to get a bit more comfortable in the box. I would like to see more steals than the eight he has on the season right now, since that's been Durbin's calling card in the minors, but it's nice to see the rookie adjusting to MLB pitching and starting to get on base more often. I think the steals will come. If you wanted a more boring option for deeper leagues, Lenyn Sosa - 1B/2B/3B, CWS (2% rostered) has jumped on the Process+ leaderboard with a score of 107 since June 15th, which is above the league average of 100. Over that same stretch, he's hitting .268/.302/.524 with five home runs, 12 runs scored, 14 RBI, and one steal in 23 games. That's not bad production across the board in deeper formats.

Zack Gelof - 2B, ATH: 8% rostered
(RETURN FROM IL, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

This is all about upside. Gelof fractured his hamate bone in the spring and then had a rib injury during his rehab assignment, which delayed his return even more. He struggled a bit last year and is just 2-for-25 to start the season this year, but we should expect rust given how long he's been out this year. He was really good as a rookie in 2023 and came into the year with 31 home runs and 29 steals in 209 career MLB games, so there is enough power and speed here to excite us a bit. The batting average will likely not be good, but remember that he plays in a minor league ballpark now that is heating up in the summer, and the ball is flying. In deeper formats, I'd still stash on my bench for another week or two.

Ha-Seong Kim - SS, TB: 8% rostered
(RETURN FROM IL, SPEED UPSIDE)

Kim returned from the IL last Friday and has emerged as the starting shortstop of Tampa Bay. I think his value will be primarily in stolen bases, but I recorded a video on Kim this week, so you can check it out for my detailed thoughts.

Brice Matthews - 3B/SS, HOU: 6% rostered
(PROSPECT CALL UP, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

The Astros called up Matthews, who is their number one prospect. He has been heating up since a cold start to the season and is slashing .283/.400/.476 in Triple-A with 10 home runs, 39 RBIs, and 25 steals. All of that points to major fantasy upside for a player who will primarily play second base and could gain even more position eligibility. The issue here is that he has very real swing-and-miss issues. He had a 30% strikeout rate and 14% swinging strike rate in Triple-A, and those very rarely improve right away at the MLB level. He has also gotten beat by fastballs at Triple-A, which is not good because the fastballs he is going to see in the big leagues are clearly superior. He has the power and speed to make you not care about a .220 batting average, but I'm not sure if that power is going to carry over right away, so I would be very cautious on my bids and not expect to use him for a few weeks as he adjusts.

Masataka Yoshida - OF, BOS (7% rostered)
(RECENT IL RETURN, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Yoshida came back from the IL this week and went 4-for-11 with two doubles, an RBI, a run scored, and one steal in his first three games of the season. He's a career .285/.343/.433 hitter in Major League Baseball with just a 13.3% strikeout rate in 248 games. He's going to provide a great batting average and the potential for solid counting stats while hitting near the middle of Boston's lineup. Well, we think. When the Red Sox bring back Yoshida, they will have only four lineup spots for Yoshida, Ceddanne Rafaela, Roman Anthony, Jarren Duran, and Wilyer Abreu. They have managed it so far by rotating days off, but I think a trade has to be coming. Maybe it's Yoshida being moved into a full-time role elsewhere?

Andrew Vaughn - 1B, MIL: 5% rostered
(POTENTIAL STARTING JOB, APPROACH CHANGE?)

With Rhys Hoskins landing on the IL for the next six to eight weeks, it's possible that Andrew Vaughn is emerging as a starting option in Milwaukee, and I'm intrigued by an approach change he made in the minors since being traded. I recorded a video this week explaining why I think Vaughn might be a decent gamble in deeper formats. You could also take a chance on Josh Bell - 1B, WAS (5% rostered), who has a Process+ score of 116 since June 15th, which is far better than the league average score of 100. Over that stretch, Bell is hitting .329/.402/.487 with two home runs, eight runs scored, and 11 RBI in 23 games. The power numbers aren't great there, but we have seen Bell be a consistent 20 home run hitter before, so maybe the ball starts to fly a bit in the summer, or he gets traded into a better lineup.

Brady House - 3B, WAS: 4% rostered
(HOT STREAK, PROSPECT GROWTH)

Another prospect starting to figure it out a little bit is Brady House. The rookie has a modest six-game hitting streak and hits in eight of nine games in July. Since being promoted, he's hitting .270/.303/.374 in 22 games with two home runs, seven runs, 12 RBI, and two steals. While his first two MLB home runs just came on Saturday, he had 13 in Triple-A this season with a 46% hard hit rate, so there is some power in that bat. I have liked his approach of late, and the results are solid for deeper formats. If we're just using Process+, we should note that Hose's teammate, Daylen Lile - OF, WAS (0% rostered), has a Process+ score of 112 since June 15th, which is pretty solid work from a young rookie. Over that span, he's hitting .247/.293/.351 with two home runs, 10 runs scored, and two steals, but he also has just 10 strikeouts to five walks in 21 games. The process is there, and the contact has been there, so maybe the results will also start to tick up in the coming months.

Tommy Pham - OF, PIT: 2% rostered
(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)

We all talked a lot about Max Muncy's glasses, but perhaps we need to pay attention to Tommy Pham's contacts. There is a great video from Logan Arblaster that shows Pham discussing a difficult situation with his contact lenses based on a rare eye condition that he has. The video was taken on June 23rd, and Pham mentions in the video that he has made contact lens changes throughout the year, but has "felt better the last week." If we take Pham's stats from June 16th, we see that he's hitting .412/.448/.667 in 17 games with three home runs, eight runs scored, and 16 RBIs. That will play in any league type. A name to keep an eye on in deeper leagues is Nathan Lukes - OF, TOR (1% rostered). Lukes has recently moved into the leadoff spot against right-handed pitching and is hitting .379/.471/.621 in nine games in July with one home run, seven runs scored, and six RBI. I'm not saying this is a breakout for the 31-year-old, but his approach is great for a leadoff hitter, and the Blue Jays have been playing really good baseball lately, so perhaps this is a solid multi-week add.

Dominic Canzone - OF, SEA: 1% rostered
(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, POWER UPSIDE)

Canzone has been putting up tremendous production since being called up and ranks 14th in Process+ among all hitters with at least 200 pitches faced since June 15th. Over that stretch, he's hitting .352/.361/.620 with five home runs, nine runs scored, and six RBI. Canzone is not going to play against lefties, and he doesn't have quite the track record of success, but Canzone has always made impressive quality of contact throughout his MLB career, so there is some upside here in deeper formats. Another option would be Isaac Collins - OF, MIL (3% rostered), who has been on a bit of a heater since June 1st, hitting .297/.404/.484 in 31 games with four home runs, 19 runs scored, 15 RBI, and three steals. He's been striking out a bit more this past week, but he has good plate discipline overall. He's pulling the ball near 50% of the time, mostly on the ground and on a line, which is good for his batting average but might cap the overall power upside. His average exit velocity is also only 88.5 mph over that span, so this is not a hitter you're adding for power, but he has a solid approach that should lead to plenty of doubles and decent counting stats, hitting fifth or sixth in Milwaukee.

Heriberto Hernandez - OF, MIA: 0% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, FORMER PROSPECT)

It may have taken a while, but Heriberto Hernandez didn't come out of nowhere. He put up good numbers as an 18-year-old in the Rangers' organization and was traded in 2020 to the Rays as part of the Nathaniel Lowe deal. He was ranked as Tampa Bay's 15th and 16th best prospect in 2021 and 2022, respectively, and while his numbers were fine, they were never quite good enough, so he was allowed to become a minor league free agent before this season. In 29 games with the Marlins, he's hitting .325/.376/.506 with three home runs, 11 runs scored, and 12 RBI. He has always struck out too much, so I believe his 18% swinging strike rate is going to catch up to him, but he has also always had power, so if the Marlins are going to keep playing him, he could have value there.

Waiver Wire Pitchers

THIS IS AN INTERESTING WEEK FOR PITCHING ADDS BECAUSE OF THE ALL-STAR BREAK. MOST TEAMS WILL RESET THEIR ROTATION DURING THE BREAK TO HAVE THEIR BEST PITCHERS START OVER THE WEEKEND, WHICH MEANS THAT MANY OF THE STREAMING ARMS WE TEND TO LIKE OR TARGET WON'T PITCH AT ALL THIS WEEK. THAT GIVES YOU THE CHOICE TO EITHER LOOK AHEAD AND TRY TO GET STARTING PITCHERS FOR CHEAPER BY FOCUSING ON THEIR JULY 21ST WEEK SCHEDULE OR YOU CAN ADD RELIEVERS FOR $1 IN MOST LEAGUES THIS WEEK TO GET AN EXTRA INNING OR TWO OVER THE WEEKEND.

Yu Darvish - SP, SD: 52% rostered
Darvish doesn't meet the criteria to be on this list, but I wanted to cover him since he just returned from the IL and his performance was better than many expected. I recorded a video after his first start in Arizona discussing my thoughts.

Jason Adam - RP, SD: 38% rostered
Adam is one of the best targets if you want a reliever for this week. He has been great this season and could easily slide into a closer role and be stellar for the Padres and fantasy managers if Suarez has another rough stretch.

Emmett Sheehan - SP, LAD: 27% rostered
Sheehan piggybacked Shohei Ohtani on Saturday, and that could be his role again in the coming weeks, but we kind of have no idea how the Dodgers are going to handle this now that Tyler Glasnow is back and Blake Snell is closing in on a return. So far this season, Sheehan has been 95 mph on the four-seamer with two inches more iVB, which got him to 17", and he also threw them upstairs. The slider and changeup are solid, and even if he's not a huge upside arm, he has a solid arsenal with command that should continue to improve as the year progresses

Bubba Chandler - SP, PIT: 26% rostered
Chandler threw six shutout innings (again) in Triple-A on Thursday, allowing five hits while walking two and striking out seven. It's time. Just call him up. This is getting silly.

Joe Boyle - SP, TB: 22% rostered
Boyle is in the Rays rotation now. Kind of. He has settled into a role pitching behind Drew Rasmussen that I actually think is good for Boyle's fantasy value. I did a detailed breakdown of Boyle’s arsenal and fantasy value here, so check it out.

Cam Schlittler - SP, NYY: 20% rostered
Cam Schlittler made his MLB debut this week against the Mariners. Schlittler is the 89th-ranked prospect, according to Baseball America, and has a 2.82 ERA this season thanks to an improving fastball that sits around 97 mph. It does have below-average extension, and we saw with Chase Burns that great velocity fastballs with mediocre extension don't miss as many bats in the big leagues. Schlittler also has three secondary braking balls that grade out well from a raw stuff perspective and showed good command in the minors this season, so I'm interested in adding him most places,as I discussed in a video I recorded last week.

Grant Taylor - SP/RP, CWS: 12% rostered
Taylor has legit electric stuff, and except for a poor performance against the Dodgers last week, he has been really impressive in his rookie season. He now has a 4.40 ERA, 1.12 WHIP, and 17/3 K/BB in his first 14.1 innings in the big leagues. His fastball is regularly sitting about 101 mph, and he has all the makings of a Mason Miller-type of former starter who could be lights out in one-inning stints out of the bullpen.

Blake Treinen - RP, LAD: 10% rostered
Trienen made his first rehab performance on Wednesday, throwing eight of his 12 pitches for strikes while sitting 95.5 mph on his sinker in a scoreless inning. He seems healthy and could be called up after the break. With Tanner Scott struggling to close out games, Treinen could emerge as an option in a closer committee in Los Angeles.

Richard Fitts - SP, BOS: 4% rostered
Fitts got sent down this week, but I think that had more to do with the Red Sox needing extra bullpen help before the All-Star break than it was with Fitts not being a part of their long-term plan. However, with Hunter Dobbins tearing his ACL, Fitts is back in Boston's rotation, and while I don't think he's a future stud, I'm still in the bag for him a bit. His fastball has ticked up to 97.4 mph in his last two starts, and the secondaries have started to show some swing and miss upside. I'd love to see the secondaries be a bit more consistent, but this is a good upside arm who is available in many leagues.

STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS

MUST BE 40% ROSTERED ON YAHOO OR UNDER (ranked in loose order)

Week of 7/14

Strong Preference

PitcherRoster%Opponent
Michael Wacha39%at MIA
Eury Perez36%vs KC

Fairly Confident

Colin Rea13%vs BOS
Andrew Heaney16%vs CWS
Dustin May39%vs MIL
Eduardo Rodriguez16%vs STL

Some Hesitation

Jack Leiter23%vs DET
Dean Kremer22%at TB
Jeffrey Springs35%at CLE
Aaron Civale3%at PIT
JP Sears17%at CLE
Sean Burke6%at PIT
Tomoyuki Sugano12%at TB
Luis Severino15%at CLE

STARTING PITCHERS TO STASH

SOME STARTS I LIKE FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 21ST

Week of 7/21

Strong Preference

PitcherOpponent
Cade Hortonvs KC, at CWS
Charlie Mortonat CLE, vs COL
Slade Cecconivs BAL, at KC
Eury Perezat MIL
Emmett Sheehanvs MIN

Fairly Confident

Cade Hortonvs KC, at CWS
Nick Martinezat WAS, vs TB
Ryne Nelsonvs HOU, at PIT
Eduardo Rodriguezat PIT
Brandon Walterat ARI, vs ATH
Bailey Obervs WAS
Frankie Montasvs LAA
Michael Sorokavs CIN, at MIN

Some Hesitation

Logan Allenvs BAL, at KC
Adrian Houserat TB

Phillies notes: Rotation plans post All-Star break, lineup changes, Bohm update

Phillies notes: Rotation plans post All-Star break, lineup changes, Bohm update originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

SAN DIEGO – As the players, managers, coaches and anyone else involved in the daily grind that is a 162-game regular season get ready to disperse to their destinations following Sunday’s game against the San Diego Padres, manager Rob Thomson did a little tinkering to his lineup.

Facing right-hander and former Phillie Nick Pivetta, Thomson moved Kyle Schwarber up to the leadoff spot in the order and had right-handed hitting Otto Kemp in left field in place of left-handed hitting Max Kepler. 

“Yeah, we’ve got the extra righty in there so just split those guys up a little bit,” Thomson said. “They should have a full bullpen today without, probably not (Jeremiah) Estrada.” The San Diego bullpen used their three All-Star relievers in Adrian Morejon, Jason Adam and Robert Suarez on Friday, so they will all be available on Sunday.

There may be some human element coming into play a little bit also in Thomson throwing Kemp out there against a righthander. Kemp grew up in Fullerton, California, attended Point Loma Nazarene University in San Diego and had a boatload of family and friends at Saturday’s game. Perhaps, just perhaps, that came into play when Thomson was making out the lineup for Sunday.

“I just want to see him get some at-bats,” said Thomson. “We’re probably going to get a couple of lefties coming out of the break with the Angels. And Pivetta has been more kind of neutral of late. And I’ve liked his at-bats. Been good.”

As for Kepler’s reaction? “Fine. He was fine,” said Thomson. “We talked yesterday and he was fine being pinch-hit for. I’m sure he’s not overly happy, but he’s professional about it.”

Rotation plans out of the break

When the Phillies return to action on Friday at Citizens Bank Park against the Los Angeles Angels, Jesus Luzardo will take the mound to begin the “second half” of the season. He will be followed by Taijuan Walker, Ranger Suarez, Zack Wheeler and Christopher Sanchez. 

So what goes into that decision making?

“There’s a little bit of a conversation, but for the most part there’s a lot of conversation with the training staff, strength and conditioning, pitching coaches,” said Thomson. “Just to figure out who needs the most rest. They’ll have a schedule and these guys will throw, (get) some type of movement. I know Luzardo is staying in the (Philadelphia) area and he’ll throw a bullpen over the break. Taijuan is going to Arizona, he’s gonna throw a bullpen over the break. Everybody is kind of on a throwing schedule.”

Prized prospect Andrew Painter is still not in the conversation of breaking into the majors, and when Thomson was asked about him Sunday – a day in which Painter was pitching for the Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs – the manager was on top of what was going on. “He’s gone five innings, no walks, four strikeouts, two home runs. Or thereabouts,” Thomson deadpanned. Painter fell to 3-3 and now has an ERA of 5.01 after giving up three runs on Sunday.

Bohm hurting

Phillies third baseman Alec Bohm was out of the lineup Sunday after getting hit with a pitch in the rib cage the day before. The Phillies are calling it a left rib contusion and you could tell in the clubhouse before the game that there was soreness still being felt by Bohm. 

“He’s still sore,” Thomson said. “They’ll keep treating him out, see if we can get him available if we need him.” Thomson said there were no X-Rays performed on Bohm, so that’s a pretty good sign. 

Slight power outage

The Phillies lack of home run hitting has certainly been a topic of conversation this year as after the 30 posted by Kyle Schwarber, the number dips mightily.

But Thomson doesn’t see that being too big of a concern as he expects to get some power from the likes of Brandon Marsh, Kepler and “maybe” Bohm, aside from the obvious players. There are other areas where the manager is pleased.

“There’s a number of guys. Our arrow is trending up,” he said. “We’re going into the break somewhat healthy. I think the least amount of IL days in at least the National League, maybe baseball. We’re second in average, second in on base, fifth in slug in the National League. We have the third best team ERA in baseball in the National League. We have the third-fewest errors committed in the National League. So our arrow is trending up. We have to start winning on the road a little bit. We scuffle a little bit on the road lately.” 

Nationals take SS Eli Willits, son of ex-MLBer Reggie, with No. 1 pick in draft

Nationals take SS Eli Willits, son of ex-MLBer Reggie, with No. 1 pick in draft originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Washington Nationals selected Oklahoma high school shortstop Eli Willits on Sunday night with the No. 1 pick in Major League Baseball’s amateur draft in a selection seen by some as a surprise.

The 17-year-old Willits is the youngest player ever taken No. 1 overall. He’s the son of ex-big leaguer Reggie Willits, who played six seasons with the Los Angeles Angels and also coached with the New York Yankees.

Willits, from Fort Cobb-Broxton High School, is a switch-hitter who is expected to develop a power swing.

“I feel like I have good hitability and I’m going to take that to the next level,” Willits said when asked about his strengths. “And I feel like my power is up and coming, but I needed to get into an organization like the Nationals that can help develop that and take that to the next level.

The draft came one week after the Nationals fired longtime general manager Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez. The timing of the moves added more uncertainty to a draft that might be one of the most unpredictable in recent years, including the choice of the No. 1 pick.

The Los Angeles Angels added another surprise with the No. 2 pick by selecting UC-Santa Barbara right-hander Tyler Bremner. Seattle followed by taking LSU lefty Kade Anderson.

The Colorado Rockies picked shortstop Ethan Holliday at No. 4, landing the son of longtime Rockies star Matt Holliday. Ethan, from Stillwater, Oklahoma, was a candidate to go first overall, just like brother Jackson Holliday with did with Baltimore in 2022. They would have been the first brothers to be drafted with the first overall pick.

Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred was greeted with boos by fans at the draft held at the Roxy Theater at The Battery, adjacent to the Braves’ Truist Park two days before MLB’s All-Star Game. Manfred noted the Braves chose eventual Hall of Famer Chipper Jones with the No. 1 overall pick and said this draft is “a chance for a team to make a franchise-altering selection like the Braves made in 1990.”

The first three rounds were scheduled for Sunday night, with the remainder of the draft to follow on Monday.

Mets' Sean Manaea officially reinstated from 60-day IL before Sunday's outing

Sean Manaea is finally back with the Mets.

As expected, the left-hander was reinstated from the 60-day injured list prior to Sunday's series finale against the Kansas City Royals where he'll make his season debut after dealing with multiple injuries.

In a corresponding move, RHP Austin Warren was optioned to Triple-A.

Manaea will pitch in New York's final game before the All-Star break, as will Clay Holmes with the Mets' pitching staff at full health for the first time this season.

ICYMI in Mets Land: New York takes series against Kansas City, prospects play in MLB Futures Game

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Saturday, in case you missed it...


Shaikin: The NFL has committed players to the L.A. Olympics. So why hasn't MLB?

LOS ANGELES, CA - JULY 5, 2025: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani.
Dodgers two-way standout Shohei Ohtani is among a trio of superstars, along with the Yankees' Aaron Judge and the Phillies' Bryce Harper, who have expressed interest in playing in the L.A. Olympic Games in 2028. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

In America, the NFL laps every other sport. Around the world, where its product is labeled “American football,” the NFL has largely failed to export its massive domestic popularity.

That hasn’t stopped the NFL from trying. The global market has too much upside. The Rams will play in Australia next year. The San Francisco 49ers staged football clinics in the United Arab Emirates last month.

When the Olympics called, the NFL said yes. In 2028, the L.A. Summer Games will include flag football — and a selection of NFL players. How better to sell your sport internationally than to attach it to the world’s largest sporting event?

Baseball is, uh, still thinking about it.

Read more:Shaikin: Dodger Stadium gondola closer to reality? Sacramento might help Team McCourt

Two years after we first started talking about whether major leaguers would play in the 2028 Olympics, Major League Baseball still has not said yes, and now the NFL and its publicity-gobbling machine is threatening to steal the spotlight.

If MLB withholds its players, the NFL will steamroll whatever collection of minor leaguers and collegians appear on the Olympic diamond. So will the NBA All-Stars competing for basketball gold.

If MLB agrees to let its players participate — and Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge and Bryce Harper have made clear they want to compete — hardly anyone will care about flag football.

“We have the best athletes in every sport,” LA28 chief Casey Wasserman told me.

“Wimbledon will end, they’ll come here. The Tour de France will end, they’ll come here and compete. Obviously, men’s and women’s basketball will have the greatest basketball players in the world. So we think that a sport like baseball ought to have the best players in the world playing.”

Here is a statistic the NFL could never match: Of the rosters announced for Tuesday’s All-Star Game, one in three players was born outside the United States. Those players represent eight different countries.

MLB has leveraged that global marketing opportunity into the World Baseball Classic, which has grown over two decades from a curiosity into a must-see event. The WBC returns next spring.

“I think it’s eventually going to get moved to the middle of the season,” Team USA manager Mark DeRosa told me at Saturday’s Futures Game. “I think it’s going to be a monster event moving forward.”

The only difference between a WBC in the middle of the season and the Olympics in the middle of the season: MLB controls the WBC.

Overhead view of Dodger Stadium during rehearsals for the MLB Home Run Derby on July 18, 2022.
Dodger Stadium will host six games during the 2028 Olympics, but will MLB players be on any of the teams participating? (Mike DiGiovanna / Associated Press)

That is not a good enough reason for MLB to skip the Olympics. The best interests of baseball cannot always be measured in today’s dollars.

Should major leaguers participate in the Olympics?

“Oh, yeah,” DeRosa said.

“It’s not that simple a question,” said Tony Clark, executive director of the players’ union, onSaturday.

Clark said the union has had “encouraging informal conversations” with LA28 officials. What Clark would like to see from MLB is an actual plan — all the logistics for all the players, as the NBA and NHL provide when their players participate in the Olympics.

MLB has its own logistics issues too. For instance, if MLB skips the 2028 All-Star Game to accommodate the Olympics, how does the league compensate Fox? The league’s media contracts expire after the 2028 season, so the 2029 All-Star Game might not be available to Fox, and MLB would rather not refund the big bucks.

This much is set, according to Wasserman: The Olympic baseball tournament would cover six days at Dodger Stadium, with a six-team field. The United States would automatically qualify as the host country. The 2026 WBC could serve as a qualifying tournament for other countries, although that is more concept than certainty at this point.

What did Wasserman say in his pitch to major league owners?

Read more:Shaikin: Why is Dodger Stadium SO LOUD?

“What an incredible opportunity to elevate the sport in a city where you have one of the great cathedrals of the sport,” he said. “There is no better chance to tell the global story of baseball than from the Olympics in Los Angeles.

“They understand that. We could have another Dream Team, or two, depending on the countries. That is a vehicle to tell the story of baseball around the world, and that is really powerful.”

To his credit, commissioner Rob Manfred gets that.

“We do see LA28 as a, you know, real opportunity from a marketing perspective,” Manfred told the Associated Press Sports Editors in April.

Logistics aside, Manfred needs to convince the owners — his bosses — that interrupting the regular season is worth it. If the Games were held halfway around the world, shutting down the season for two weeks might be problematic.

But in Los Angeles, for one week? Kill the All-Star Game for a year, and start the regular season three days early, or finish it three days late.

Wasserman said he has had “pretty consistent dialogue” with the league.

“We hope they get to the right answer, which is Major League Baseball players being eligible to play,” Wasserman said.

“We’ll be as patient as we need to be to get to the right answer.”

The wrong answer: The world is watching the Olympics, and MLB is giving us the Colorado Rockies.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Shohei Ohtani pitches three scoreless innings in game against Giants

SAN FRANCISCO — Shohei Ohtani pitched three scoreless innings against the San Francisco Giants on Saturday as the Dodgers star continues to work his way back from elbow surgery.

Working as an opener for the fifth time this season after not pitching in all of 2024, Ohtani threw 36 pitches, 25 for strikes while serving as Los Angeles’ opener for the fifth time this season. He allowed one hit and struck out the side on 12 pitches in the first inning when his fastball was twice clocked at 99.9 mph.

“Overall a very efficient outing,” Ohtani said through an interpreter. “I was glad that I was able to prevent runs and we were able to keep the lead throughout the game.”

The Giants only two runners against Ohtani came on a four-pitch walk to Jung Hoo Lee in the second inning and Mike Yastrzemski’s single in the third.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts noted a difference in Ohtani’s mindset when he’s on the mound.

“You can just see it. ... that different demeanor that he carries on days that he pitches,” Roberts said. “He really is very smart as far as being astute and knowing where we’re at and knowing that this is an important win for us, an important day. He brought that intensity today. It’s not overt but you can feel it.”

Ohtani threw 19 pitches that were at least 97 mph.

“Aside from the stuff, I’m more happy with the command of my pitches and being able to attack the zone,” Ohtani said. “Today was one of those days where my fastball felt pretty good, so I leaned on it a little bit more today.”

The two-way Japanese star, who did not pitch in all of 2024, was also the team’s designated hitter and hit in the leadoff. He grounded out in his first two at-bats and then struck out twice.

Ohtani has allowed one run and five hits over nine innings this season.

Twins’ Byron Buxton hits for first cycle at Target Field since ballpark opened in 2010

MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Twins All-Star center fielder Byron Buxton admitted to feeling a little added pressure before Saturday’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates. It was his bobblehead day, meaning the first 10,000 fans to walk through the gates at Target Field would receive a replica of Buxton doing his “Buck Truck” home run celebration.

“I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t nervous before the game started, just knowing it was bobblehead day,” Buxton said. “Obviously you want to come out and do something good.”

Buxton did more than something good. He became the first player to hit for the cycle at Target Field since the ballpark opened in 2010, helping ignite the Twins to a 12-4 win over the Pirates.

It was the 12th cycle in Twins history and the first since Jorge Polanco had one in 2019.

Buxton had three hits through three innings — a single in the first, a triple in the six-run second and a double in the third. After singling again in the fifth, he had one more opportunity in the bottom of the seventh.

Buxton, who will participate in next week’s Home Run Derby in Atlanta, crushed a 427-foot solo homer off Pirates reliever Andrew Heaney with two outs in the seventh to make it an 11-3 game and complete the cycle. That brought the Target Field crowd to its feet, many of which celebrated with Buxton bobbleheads.

With his team holding a comfortable lead, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli almost took Buxton out of the game before his final at-bat, he admitted afterward. Thankfully for Baldelli — and Buxton — a few coaches reminded the skipper what was at stake.

“He was 4 for 4 at the time. But with everything going on during a game, sometimes I’ll be the one that might miss on a hitting streak or something that’s going on with a particular player,” Baldelli said. “But once they reminded me of that, he was going to stay in the game. He was going to get another at-bat, regardless of the score, and give him a chance to do something great.”

The homer was Buxton’s 21st of the season, tied for fifth most in the American League. With two runs driven in Saturday, Buxton now has 55 RBIs on the season — just one shy of his single-season high. He boasts an OPS of .921 and is 17 for 17 in stolen bases.

“It’s one of the greatest first halves I’ve ever witnessed,” Baldelli said.

Buxton was replaced in center field after the seventh inning, but not before getting a standing ovation curtain call from Twins fans. He also received a Gatorade bath courtesy of teammate Ty France, who was headed to the clubhouse before realizing that nobody had doused Buxton yet after the game.

“It’s special,” Buxton said. “To be able to come out on bobblehead day like this and have a day like this is something I won’t forget.”